VITAL ELECTION DATE Sec Page 4 It Daiii CLOUDY Laitest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 108 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Barber Trial Verdict May Come Today Student, Faculty Testimony Heard By AL BLUMROSEN A verdict is expected today in the trial of barber Dominic Das- cola for allegedly violating the Diggs anti-discrimination act. The trial was held yesterday in the packed chambers of Judge Jay H. Payne's Municipal Court before a jury of five men and a woman. Dascola was accused by William Grier '48M of refusing to give him a haircut because of his race. Court will reconvene this morning when the jury will be charged and attempt to reach a verdict. Prosecuting Attorney Douglas K. Reading brought out testi- mony by Grier, Prof. Urie Bron- fenbrenner, and Prof. George A. Satter of the psychology depart- ment and student Nicholas Dan- cy claimed that Grier had come into Dascola's shop on Dec. 11 and asked for a haircut. The witnesses said Dascola told Grier that he didn't know how to cut a Negro's hair and did not want to attempt a poor job. On the stand, Dascola said he would have cut Grier's hair if he had known how, but that it re- quired special equipment, training and experience to cut the hair of that race. Oette Marney, local Negro bar- ber, testifying for the prosecution, said that he had cut white men's hair for several years in Tennes- I see before beginning to cut Ne- gro's hair and that there was no difference in the techniques used. Dascola claimed that he had never been asked to cut a Negro's hair until Grier approached him last December and that he had never done any work of that kind. Carroll Little, former IRA presi- dent, testified that in November, 1946 he had asked and been re- fused a haircut, while congratulat- ing Dascola oi a letter to The Daily deploring discrimination. Dascola, on the witness 'stand, said in rebuttal, that Little had never asked him for a hair cut. In the summation, Prosecutor Reading told the jury that prog- ress in the fight for civil rights should not be stopped. "This is not a test of law," he said, "but a test of people's respect for law." Defense attorney John Conlin noted that the only complainants were students or faculty members. "The only question is whether Dascola knew how to cut a Negro's hair," Conlin said. He claimed that V the Diggs act was not intended to deny anyone the right to refuse to do a job if hie couldn't do it well, Files Ready For Parleys Oppose Far-Reaching Mlitiary .Aignnwnill HELSINKI, Finland, March 5-. (-')--A majority of the Finnish parliament favored tonight the opening of treaty negotiations with Russia but opposed entering any far-reaching military alli- ance. Of the six parliamentary groups, only the Communist-dominated Popular Front bloc has voiced sup- port for a full military alignment with the Soviet Union. This bloc has 51 of the 200 seats in the Fin- nish Parliament. Prime minister Stalin of Russia has asked for a treaty of friend- ship and mutual assistance. If the proposed treaty is stripped of mutual assistance clauses, it would boil down to a cultural and friendship pact. Most Finns feel this would be meaningless since the September, 1947 peace treaty already regulates such relations between the two countries. President Juho Paasikivi had asked the parliamentary groups for their opinions on the treaty negotiations. A government minis- ter said the statements of the va- rious parties should be regarded as "merely reflecting public opinion" in Finland. The important point to remem- ber, he said, is that Paasikivi alone must make the decision on the Calling 'Editors' * ' aN AP * DON'T ... write * SHOOT! us about it. * * THIS is day number four of The Daily's "If I Were Editor" contest and our readers have pulled no punches telling us what's right and what's wrong up here. With a possible $5 in the offing, one of our readers came through yesterday with a parody of our sportswriting. His general com- plaint was that you couldn't fol- low the sportswriter through a maze of comparative scores and "predictions of things to come." WELL what about it? Is sports- writing baloney or isn't it? Other readers are hitting us constantly on editorial policy. Most say we load the columns whether we sign the edits or not -that there ought to be a more "pro and con stuff" attitude. Only one reader thinks the editorial page looks like a "bulletin board" so far. BUT there's still a lot to be said. So far nobody has written about the "readability" of The Daily. For instance. Can you get through our first graphs on the first try, or shall we simplify everything a la Free Press? Let's have your opinion. Enter the "If I Were Editor" contest and tell us what you would do if you ran The Daily. Keep your letters under 250 words and mail them to "If I Were Editor" be- fore March 12. Daily Senior Edi- tors will announce the five $5 winning letters in the March 14 issue. 'U' Acts After Third Dance Photo Fiasco Demands Written Picture Contracts The University cracked down on the dance photograph set-up yes- terday after the third contract fiasco in little more than a year. Associate Dean of Students Walter B. Rea said that photo agreements for future all-campus dances would have to be made by written contracts which would become effective only when ap- proved by the University auditor, Meanwhile, the State Drug Co., snapped the pictures at last night's Soph Prom while Bob Gach called off a threatened suit against the prom commit- tee, although he claimed he had legal grounds for suit. The mixup started last week when Gach made a verbal agree- ment with Don Hiles, committee chairman, to take the pictures for the dance. Hiles didn't know it, but com- mittee member Jack Waters had already clinched the same sort of contract with the State Drug Co. Faced with two conflicting agreements, the Soph Prom Com- mittee met Wednesday and de- cided to honor the earlier one with State Drug and to break the later contract with Gach. Gach told The Daily yester- day that "the committee made a contract with me and broke it at the last minute.aTheir ex- cuses appear pretty thin." Waters, who made the State Drug agreement on his own, with- out consulting Hiles, said that he'd understood it was has job as pub- licity chairman to arrange for the pictures. Hiles, looking a bit flustered, said he regretted that the Gach contract had to be broken, -and called the whole affair "a case of the right hand's not knowing what the left hand was doing." A changed and broadened literary college curriculum aimed at providing a flexibility in the concentration program "and common intellectual experiences for all students" was adopted early this week by the faculty. Charles H. Peake, assistant dean of the literary college, made the announcement yesterday and said the program will go into effect after various administrative details are settled. The new plan is partly in response to student criticisms hitting the "restrictiveness" of the present program, he said. Under the proposals, students in their last two years will be able to graduate without the so-called major by electing an integrated program involving two or more departments. These "inter-departmental" programs will be supplemented by the special "degree programs," already authorized by the faculty. Examples of "degree programs" in effect now are science and math and religion and ethics combinations. Thus, a student may earn his degree, for example, by taking a combination of English, economics and political science. I 1 Lit School Curriculum Altered Other programs now in existence will be continued. These include department (English), area (Latin-American) and Teacher Certifi- cate. The important changes in the freshman-sophomore programs will give all students a pretty well rounded pre-concentration founda- tion. Admission to concentration will require 54 hours in six groups instead of the present 42 hours in three groups. Students will take two semesters in either literature, humanities, fine arts or music--and 14 hours in the social sciences and 12 hours in the natural sciences. Another new requirement will be two years of college work or the equivalent in a foreign language. Also students will have a choice of either two semesters in math or two in philosophy. The two semester requirement in English composition has not been altered. The plan was drawn up by the Committee on Curriculum Revision under the chairmanship of Prof. K. C. McMurry, of the geography department. Regents Hold Back Political Talk Decision By-Law Ruling Set f'orApril 2 Student political groups seeking a revision or modification of exist- ing by-laws prohibiting political speeches on University property will have to wait a i onth for a fmil diecisii-tHie -Board of Re- gents decided yesterday to post- pone all consideration of the prob- lem until their April 2 meeting. The decision was reached af- ter the Regents discuss d a com- munication from the Student Affairs Committee which ar- rived too late to be included In the regular agenda of yester- day's meeting. The Student Affairs Commnittee Resolution cited the existingby- laws, plus a conflicting interpre- tation adopted in 1926 and asked for a new interpretation to guide them in passing on speaker re- quests from student political clubs. The official statement from the Regents' Meeting said that the Board would "give full con- sideration to this request April 2." New Sports A rena Delayed By Finances, Crisler Reports By ARCH PARSONS Daily Special Writer Preferential ticket problems and early migrations to Michigan athletic contests are going to be with us for quite a while, because the University's proposed athletic plant expansion has stalled in the face of financial difficulties, according to Athletic Director "Fritz" Crisler.r That new 20,000-seat sports arena which was discussed last year is still very far away. A new clubhouse on the golf course is the only project wiiich has reached even the "sketching -------- _ .. _ _-- --. --- and planning" stage. "The con- said might be a "utility building," tractor's shack which is now usedB.a as a clubhouse is a disgrace," Cris- Besides basketball and hockey Ier said. "We hope to obtain final games, other events, such as coin- of the new building with- mencement exercises and concerts, in the next month ' might be held there. It is pro- The Wolverine director admitted posed that the new building would that receipts. from Michigan stand on the site of the present football games-the athletic ad-A etic Admmistration Office' ministration's only source of rev- and extend north towards the enue-increased last season, but corner of Hoover and State lie added that the cost of operat- stbee sketches of the buikd- ing the University's existing ath-inhaebnmd. letic plant has risen 50 per cent If the new sports arena proves since before the war. to be an impossibility, Yost Field "The State Legislature has House might be remodeled. "The never appropriated any money for Field House was constructed so Michigan's athletic buildings in that a second balcony could be the past, and I can see little pos- added to it if necessary," Crisler sibility of a change in their pol- stated, "but this would not be as icy for the future," Crisler said. satisfactory as a new building, al- "Any finances for the proposed though it might ease the present building program will probably situation quicker." come from our receipts and from "It's a bad situation now," Cris- a new bond issue or loan which ler concluded, "and the trouble we may be forced to float," he lies in the fact that the present added. athletic plant was constructed for Long-distance plans still call for a student body half the size of the the sports arena which Crisler present one." Three Team Battle Waged In Track Tilt Michigan Qualiies ihree Men in 440 CHAMPAIGN, Ill., March 5 - (/P)-Ohio State set a surprising pace in the preliminaries of the Big Nine indoor track and field meet tonight by qualifying 11 per- formers, one more than the de- fending champion Illinais. Michigan, also rated a strong title threat in tomorrow's 12 event finals qualified nine men, Iowa had six certified in the six event test at the Illinois armory, while Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Purdue, and Northwestern had three apiece. Despite its low count of three qualifiers, Northwestern's Bill Porter turned in the best per- formances of the evening. His :08.6 in the 70 highs and :07.9 in the 70 lows were only one-tenth of a second off the American in-I door marks for both events. f Ohio State was paced by versa-r tile Lloyd Duff, who also skipped the low hurdles in :08.6, qualifiedt in the low hurdles and had the second best broad jump of 23 feet, 6Tl inches. The best broad jump was 23 feet 117 inches by Lloyd La Mois ofj Minnesota, who conceivably mayc break the conference mark of 24 feet, 5 inches held by Paul Mil-, ler of Purdue. La Mois recently cleared 24 feet 8 inches in a league triangular meet. Best time in the 60 yard dash trials was :063 by Church May of Purdue. Semi-finals in this event will be held tomorrow af- ternoon, along with semi-finals in the 70 yard high hurdles. Besid'- the broad jump, the best slOt for a new conference record in tomorrow's finals appears to be in the shot put here. Michigan's Chuck Fonville will be shooting for the 57 foot mark after getting a league mark of 53 feet, 2 inches in last ,year's meet. Half mile champion Herb Bar- ten of Michigan warmed up for See HARRIERS, Page 3 Lawy er Guil Back1sMYDA The local chapter of the Stu- dent National Lawyers Guild has joined with other student groups in urging the reinstatement of MYDA. In a letter to President Ruth- ven they pointed, out that no charges were ever brought against the organization or its individual members. They stated their belief that student groups should be judged on the basis of their ac- tivities and should receive equal and impartial treatment under rules governing student conduct. Jerry McCroskey, chairman of the student chapter of the Na- tional Lawyers Guild, said: "We urge you as President of our Uni- versity to resist the elements in our national life who are attempt- ing to suppress that free expres- sion of ideas without which an educational institution cannot ful- fill its responsibility of training American citizens for tomorrow." DaRy-Patterson, BEFORE THE INVASION-Five high-spirited Michigan men relax in the womanless, bookless atmosphere of the Union taproom. Every day approximately 5,000 students gather here to talk, take it easy, and consume over 3,000 cups of coffee and 100 dozen doughnuts. Women attending the Union Open House today can enjoy the yearly privilege of seeing the taproom by daylight. Union Open House To Get Underway This is the day. At 1:15 p.m. Jim Brieske will dig hi$ cleats into the crusted snow in front of the Union, pause, and make the short dash to where Gene Derricotte will hold the ball that will score the copversion, which will officially open the Un- ion Open House. Then, through doors which for a year have admitted only males, hundreds of men, women, and children will pass-some will con- tinue to the pool for a gigantic Water Ballet, others to the Main Ballroom to see Rose Bowl films, and still others to the fabulous sci- entific show, "Previews of Prog- ress." According to Union student offi- cers, visitors will have hardly a minute to spare if they are to see all of the many shows and exhibi- tions planned. The Water Ballet, featuring 25 of the most skillful (and beautiful) women swimmers on campus, will begin at 1:30, and offer 45 minutes of water specta- cles. Meanwhile. the men behind the "Previews of Progress" show will be pushing buttons, turning switches, and testing the many marvels of modern science which they will demonstrate at 2 p.m. Those who miss the first "Pre- views" exhibit will be able to see the show when it is presented again at 4 p.m. ftut that's not all. During the afternoon some of the best ping- pong players, bowlers, and bil- liard experts in Ann Arbor will ex- hibit the form which has put them into the class of champions. Some other attractions are well worth remembering, too. The Un- ion tower, student offices, IFC of- fices and glee club room will be open for inspection. Women visi- tors may walk down the well worn steps, past the chain-smoking deer, and into the spacious tap- room, second "home" to thousands of Michigan men. To top off the giant affair, there will be a gala specialty dance from 9 to 12 midnight, featuring the music of Frank Tinker and his Union orchestra and the intermis- sion singing of the West Quad Glee Club. The time: 1:15 p.m. The place: The Michigan Union. The cost: Nothing. I The Daily discovered yesterday that the seeds of the controversial by-law lay originally in a 1924 ac- tion by the Regents supporting a policy presented by a Deans' Con- ference. The action declared: "Speeches in support of particular candidates of any particular party or faction ordinarily shall not be permitted," The Regents rewrote this ac- tion into an actual by-law in 1937, and at that time omitted the controversial word "ordi- nary" for its text. The Student Affairs Committee contends that this by-law is too restrictive and if strictly interprited would even rule out student and fac- I'Wallking Mart'Weaves Way Round World in Wheelbarrow. By GEORGE WALKER It's a long way from Ellensburg, Wash., to Ann Arbor, Mich., but the lean, leathery man who pushed a wheelbarrow over the 6,222 mile route was anything but exhausted. Larry Hightower, 47 year old ex-cowpuncher, was in the highest of spirits as he told a Daily reporter of his plans to carry out a two- year old dream of gushing a wheelbarrow around the world. "One clay, two years ago, I happened to look at two calendars hanging on the wall. On one was a. picture of an airplane circling 'Ith o the globe-the other showed a Bjig tive Gets man pushing a wheelbarrow I through a garden. Then it struck Case me: If the pilot can do it with ---~~~~_ an airplane, why can't I do it LAKE SUCCESS, March 5-(P) with a wheelbarrow? And that's -The United Nations Security just wljat I'm doing," he ex- Council late today rejected a TJ Members Protest Eisler Internien t As Michigan faculty members and students forwarded protest petitions to Atty. Gen. Tom Clark, Federal Judge William Bondy yes- terday refused to release on bail three alleged Communists await- ing deportation proceedings on Ellis Island, according to the As- sociated Press. The judge informed attorneys he must give the matter of bail further study before he could make a decision. The men are Gerhart Eisler, al- leged No. 1 U. S. Communist John Williamson, labor secretary of the Communist Party, and Charles A. Doyle, an official of the CIO Gas, Coke and Chemical Workers un- ion' The faculty petition, which also named Claudia Jones as one of those held "without bail," was signed by L. G. Vander Velde, Mi- chael Pargment, David Leonard, A. J. Jobin, Clara Park, John F. Shepard and Wilfred Kaplan., ulty speeches in support of po- litical candidates or parties, ridgesFired Two Generals Threatened WASHINGTON, March 5-(P) -The CIO fired Harry Bridges to- day and Senator Taylor of Idaho suggested that President Truman fdre Generals MacArthur and Wedemeyer. Foreign policy and third party politics were behind both devel- opimenlts. Bridges lost his job as the CIO's Northern Califorida regional di- rector because he supported Henry A. Wallace for President and op- posed the European recovery pro- gram. His stand was contrary to the CIO's. Taylor, Wallace's running mate on the third party ticket, wrote Mr. Truman that the two generals in the Far East were urging "a foreign policy at variance with that of the administration." Mr. Truman fired Wallace as Secretary of Commerce in 1946, Taylor recalled, for publicly dis- agreeing with administration for- eign policy. The Idaho senator added: "In order that you may be con- sistent with the policy which you laid down in the case of Mr. Wal- lace, I suggest that the resigna- tions of General MacArthur and General Wedemeyer must also be requested." Lewis 'Teases e O ers PITTSBURGH, March 5-(P) Coal opera tor today dangled in an uncomfortable fix designed for them by that old master of sus- pcense-bristling browed John L. Lewis, Here's what it's all about: The contract with the UMW signed last July provides that op- erators shall pay a royalty of 10 cents a ton on all coal mined. That money goes into a welfare funds for workers-to the tune of about $60,000,000 a year. Lewis wants $100 monthly pen- sions paid to miners 60 and over with 20 years' service in the mines. I r 6 Freezing Weaiher Here To Stay Following tradition older than the Michigan-Minnesota football rivalry, March continued in its lionesque fashion yesterday, while townspeople and students bundled themselves up for polar weather and piled more coal on the fire. Looking for relief, The Daily called the U.S. Weather Bureau in Ypsilanti, but little warmth was forthcoming from that direction. Bureau reports predict a high of freezing today and possible snow tonight. Grudgingly, the Bureau issued an optimistic report for Sunday and Monday when a slightly ris- ing trend is expected, but still it's a long hard winter. plained. Two Year Trek Hightower left Ellensburg on July 4, 1946, and has spent the last' two years on the highways. He chose a devious route-not content with the shortest way he journeyed all the way to Texas, through the middle west and on to Ann Arbor, wvhere he arrived Thursday morning. Hardships? Well, once, in a Texas desert, the thermometer reached a gruelling 140 degrees, and in Illinois sank to eight below. Along the way, he was stopped by hundreds of motorists each day, who wanted an explanation of his strange actions. Hightower's wheelbarrow is his pride and joy. Complete with lights, the balloon-tired model is equipped with all the necessities of a wheelbarrow pusher-flash- lights, signals, and a hundred other odds and ends. .r_ A- - .:e. United States proposal which would have committed the coun- cil now to all-out aid in parti- tioning Palestine. Instead, the Council voted to ask the big powers to consult and then say what instructions the council should give the UN Pales- tine Commission. These instructions would bear on implementation of the UN As- sembly's partition decision of last Nov. 29. (IHURCH VIEWS: Vatican Decree Applicable to Local Catholics, Priest Says MORE MEATLESS DAYS AHEAD? Long Meat Strike Will Affect l' Supply The Vatican decree directing Catholics to vote only for candi- dates who "defend the rights of the ChMuch" is applicable to Ann Arbor Catholicg s well as those in ing election there will automati- cally excommunicate Catholics. The situation in the United States is a little'different, Father Rromlp nnnfc nit Irhrpiir+ i